Curriculum and Instruction News

UW–Madison joins Big Ten Voting Challenge

September 28, 2017

UW-Madison is joining the other Big Ten institutions in a new competition to promote civic engagement: the Big Ten Voting Challenge.

Chancellor Rebecca M. Blank, along with her fellow Big Ten chancellors and presidents, announced the challenge in an email to students earlier this month. “One of the most important values we teach at our universities is the importance of civic engagement. Voting in elections gives our students a voice in the democratic process and in the decisions that affect local, state, and national issues,” the leaders wrote. The Big Ten Voting Challenge is a nonpartisan initiative to encourage students to exercise their right to vote.

Voter turnout for people under age 30 is historically low as compared with older segments of the population, especially in midterm elections. According to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University, only 21 percent of those under 30 turned out to vote in 2014, compared with 36 percent overall. Turnout on university campuses across the country was even lower, at just 19 percent.

The Big Ten Voting Challenge will help to mobilize registration and turnout efforts at all 14 universities. After the 2018 election, trophies will go to two universities — the one with the highest eligible voter turnout and the one with the most improved turnout.

UW-Madison already has a strong record of successful student participation in elections thanks to partnerships between Associated Students of Madison, the Division of Student Life, the Morgridge Center for Public Service, University Housing, the Wisconsin Union and elections officials in the city of Madison and Dane County. Actions have included:

Partnering with the Andrew Goodman Foundation on the Vote Everywhere campaign, a nonpartisan, experiential program that recruits, trains and supports campus vote ambassadors.

Offering students a free voter-compliant I.D. card as part of student orientation (and on request thereafter) through the Wiscard office.

Providing campus space for voter registration by ASM and other groups.

Providing campus space for two weeks of one-stop registration and early voting in fall 2016. Nearly 4,000 Madison residents voted early on campus.